Authors: Sara Craven
to the farm.
Sabine put her chicken casserole on to cook, then made up her bed.
It would be good to sleep in real sheets tonight, she thought.
But when she eventually went to bed after a leisurely supper sleep
proved elusive. Her body was weary but her brain was buzzing,
trying to make sense of everything she'd seen and heard that day.
And at the forefront of her mind was Rohan Saint Yves.
The sadness in Monique Lavaux's eyes had emphasised to her that
there was no future in allowing herself to love a man who was
committed to another woman.
I shouldn't have allowed him anywhere near me, she told herself
bitterly. I've been a fool and more than a fool. Because even if
Antoinette didn't exist Rohan wouldn't involve himself with me —
at least not seriously. To him, I'm just my mother's daughter,
unworthy of trust or respect.
Although that didn't necessarily mean he wouldn't take anything
she was unwise enough to offer, she reminded herself. So the most
sensible thing to do was ignore her treacherous emotions and avoid
Rohan's company altogether from now on. For one thing, she
wouldn't wait for him to cancel their trip to Monpazier. She'd do it
first. In the morning, she'd ask Marie-Christine to take him a note,
saying that she'd had to make other plans. She'd leave early and go
to Les Eyzies as Mademoiselle Lavaux had suggested, or perhaps
to La Roque-Gageac, said to be the most beautiful village in
France. She probably couldn't avoid having dinner at the chateau,
but at least she wouldn't be alone with him there.
The actual composition of the note, over coffee the next morning,
took a lot of thought, and several sheets of paper. She didn't want
to sound rude, she thought, just —firm, letting him know without
ambiguity that she wasn't available.
She put on a straight yellow skirt, just brushing her knee, and a
matching vest-top. Even replica caves might be cold, she thought,
slinging a yellow and white striped cotton blazer over her arm, and
picking up her bag and camera on the way out to the car.
A swift call at the farm, and then freedom, she told herself, as she
walked under the arch.
Bonjour
.' He was leaning casually against her car, very much at his
ease in the morning sunshine. 'Isn't it a beautiful day?'
'No,' Sabine said hoarsely. 'I mean —what are you doing here?'
'Something told me you might wish to make an earlier start than
we'd planned.' The hooded eyes surveyed her with frank
appreciation mingled with amusement, 'I see I was right.'
Sabine bit her lip. 'Actually, I've decided to leave Monpazier to
another day. You—you have business to attend to —and I should
only be in the way.'
'Then my business can wait too,' he said. 'Where do you wish to go
instead?'
There was silence, then she said unevenly, 'You're not making this
very easy for me.'
He shrugged. 'We have a date. You're trying to stand me up. Why
should I make it easy?' He straightened. He said quietly, 'Sabine, I
am trying, clumsily perhaps, to make amends for everything that
has happened. I would like you to spend the day with me, please.
Just
a few hours looking round the
bastide
and having a meal
together. Nothing more, I promise.' His smile was as warm as the
sun. It beckoned —cajoled. 'Please,' he repeated.
A sweet, dizzying weakness swamped her body. Under the
concealing folds of the blazer, her tightly clenched hands were
trembling. It was madness. It was danger, and she knew it. She
should walk away.
'I wrote you a note.' She held out the letter.
'I guessed you would.' He took it from her, tore it across, and threw
the pieces away. His eyes challenged her. 'Now, tell me to my face
that you don't want to come with me.'
The clamour of her heartbeat filled the silence between them, as
she struggled to find the words that would send him away forever.
But they wouldn't come.
She said on a little sigh, 'I—can't say that.'
'Then let's waste no more time.' He walked over to his car, parked
near by and opened the passenger door for her. 'We're spending the
day together,' he said softly, urgently, as Sabine got into the car,
taking care not to brush against him. 'That's all.'
And that was the problem, Sabine thought, staring rigidly ahead of
her as he started the car. It was—only a day to him, but to her. . .
She shivered. To her, it was the beginning of the rest of her life —
alone.
THEY took the road from Villereal, approaching Monpazier from
the south. It was a fast journey, and accomplished for the most part
in silence, although Rohan did point out the entrance to the
Chateau de Biron, as they flashed past.
The chateau was in the process of being restored by the
departement
of the Dordogne, he told her.
'It is quite an operation,' he added drily. 'Every generation of the
Gontaut-Biron family added something to it since it began in the
twelfth century. There are now fifteen different buildings,
including the biggest vaulted kitchens in France.'
'I'll have to add it to my list,' she said. 'Although I doubt whether
I'll have time to fit everything in.'
'How long are you planning to stay?' The question was clearly
casual, his attention fixed firmly on the road ahead.
'I —haven't decided yet,' she said after a brief hesitation.
'You have work, of course?' He too paused. 'A — life to return to
in England?'
'Very much so,' she returned composedly. He was probing, she
realised, trying to discover if that 'life' included a man. Well, he
could keep guessing.
'What is your work?'
'I'm a translator — not just for French, but Spanish and Italian as
well, and a little Portuguese. Although I'm basically a freelance,
most of my work comes through various agencies.'
'It's a good living for you?'
She shrugged. 'I've no complaints.'
'You have no ambitions to work abroad — in Brussels for instance,
or Strasbourg?'
'It's something I've considered. But I'd rather gain a little more
experience first. Or I'd thought of getting a teaching
qualification—maybe starting my own commercial language
school.' She made herself sound enthusiastic, bursting with ideas.
'Now that Europe's really opened up, the sky's the limit.'
A steep hill wound sharply upwards into Monpazier. Rohan parked
the car under some trees just outside the main wall, then they
walked together through an arched gateway, and up the shaded
street, passing between tall houses, their windows firmly shuttered
against the intrusive sun, intermingled with shops.
A door in a wall stood slightly ajar, and Sabine glimpsed the
enclosed grassy courtyard of someone's garden, like an emerald set
in grey stone. There were flowers everywhere in tubs and window-
boxes, and music played softly over speakers placed at strategic
points.
Rohan was speaking. 'All the
bastides
were built like grids, with
the streets crossing each other at right angles. The emphasis was
on defence, you understand. It was essential that the walls could be
manned fast in time of emergency.
'Monpazier, in fact, was built for the King of England, Edward the
First, and one of its hotels is even named for him.'
Sabine's brow was furrowed. 'But why was that? Surely the
English and French were nearly always at war in those days.'
'The whole of Aquitaine belonged to the English crown, through
the great Duchess Eleanor,' Rohan explained. 'She was the Queen
of France and the most beautiful and fascinating woman in Europe,
but she fell out of love with her husband on a crusade to the Holy
Land, when she met Henry the Second of England, who was much
younger than her.'
'And I thought toy boys were a modern invention.' Sabine's lips
twitched in amusement. 'So what happened?'
'Didn't you learn history when you were at school?' Rohan's brows
lifted in mock censure.
'Yes,' she admitted. 'But we seemed to concentrate on the
economic effects of the Industrial Revolution, and stuff like that.
The love-affairs of kings and queens would have been far more
interesting.'
He laughed. 'I can believe it. Well, Eleanor divorced King Louis,
who preferred religion to women anyway, and married Henry, who
then became Duke of Aquitaine through her. Although he and his
son Richard Coeur de Lion had to fight all their lives to maintain
the title, and Edouard Premier too when his time came,' he added.
'Eleanor adored the Perigord. She established the Courts of Love in
Aquitaine, where women were worshipped almost like goddesses.'
'And she was chief goddess, I suppose,' Sabine commented.
'Of course. A troubadour once sang of her that if he possessed the
whole world he would sacrifice it to hold the Queen of England in
his arms for just one night.'
'How wonderful to be able to inspire such devotion,' Sabine said
slowly.
He shot her an amused glance. 'You don't think a man could feel so
deeply for a woman these days?'
'It would be nice to think so.' She shrugged. 'But I doubt it.'
'But here in the land of the troubadours,' he said softly, 'anything is
possible.'
Avoiding his suddenly intent look, Sabine transferred her attention
across the road. 'I suppose that's the main church!' she exclaimed
brightly. 'It's enormous.'
'And also very old.' The dry note in his voice told her he was
perfectly aware of her manoeuvre. 'It was begun in the thirteenth
century and there's a famous inscription above the door.'
Sabine stared up at the lettering cut into the ancient stonework.'
"The people of France recognise the existence of the Supreme
Being, and the immortality of the soul,"' she read slowly. 'What's
so unusual about that?'
'It was put there during the Revolution,' Rohan returned. 'At a time
when the Church and religious belief were under a great deal of
pressure. But the people of the Dordogne have always had a
reputation for being independent thinkers.'
He slid a casual hand under her elbow and guided her up the street
towards another arched gateway. 'Now you'll see why Monpazier
was known as England's pearl,' he said softly.
This was the heart of the
bastide,
Sabine realised with a gasp of
delight. It was a big central square, completely surrounded by
covered arcades above which rose the creamy stones of the
original medieval houses, topped by the steeply sloping, earth-red
roofs.
For a moment, the centuries seemed to roll away, and she could
visualise grim-faced men in chain-mail racing to answer some
alarm, while women in wimpled head-dresses leaned down from
the Gothic windows to bid them Godspeed.
The present-day ambience was slightly more prosaic. The shadows
of the arcades sheltered the facades of modern shops, and directly
below their arches stone benches and troughs of flowering plants
had been placed. Instead of soldiers, tourists armed only with
cameras patrolled the freshly washed cobbles of the square, while,
outside the various restaurants and the
tabac
on the corner, tables
with bright umbrellas were being set out in the sunshine.
Directly opposite was a timbered market hall similar to the one in
Villereal, where the original grain measures could still be seen,
Rohan told her. There was a local market every Thursday, and, in
addition, each spring and summer Monpazier was the centre for a
giant mushroom fair. No one in the square seemed to be in a hurry,
but a purposeful bustle of activity permeated the atmosphere just
the same.
'Would you like some coffee?' Rohan guided Sabine to one of the
tables outside the
tabac.
He gave the order, then leaned back in his
chair, smiling at her. 'Well?'
'It's incredible,' she admitted. 'One of the loveliest places I've ever
seen. And so peaceful.'
'It wasn't always like this,' he said. 'Monpazier has a chequered
history, torn between French and English, Catholic and Protestant.
The
place
here hasn't always been so welcoming, believe me. In
the seventeenth century a weaver called Buffarot led a local revolt,
and was broken on the wheel only a few metres from where we're
sitting.'
Sabine shuddered. 'How terrible.'
'They were terrible times. But Monpazier seems now to be at peace